Almost two centuries before the shadow of the Mothman
reared its head in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, the land around the Ohio
River ran red with blood. As the inhabitants of the American colonies
began to push their way to the west, and later fought for their
independence from Britain, they entered into deadly combat with the Native
American inhabitants of the land. Perhaps their greatest foe in these
early Indian wars was Chief Cornstalk, who later became a friend to the
Americans. But treachery, deception and murder would bring an end to the
chief’s life and a curse that he placed on Point Pleasant would linger for
200 years, bringing tragedy, death and disaster....

There is no denying that the southeastern corner of
Ohio, and the surrounding area of West Virginia, is considered by many to
be one of the most haunted areas of the country. West Virginia has long
been thought of as one of the strangest parts of the country in regards to
ghosts, legends and strange happenings. This part of the country, which
was originally a part of Virginia, was regarded by the Native Americans as
a “haunted” spot, plagued with ghost lights, phantoms and strange
creatures. The town of Parkersburg, just north on the river from Point
Pleasant, has more than its share of ghosts and nearby is Athens County,
Ohio, home to the most haunted city in the entire state.

But how did this region gain such a reputation? Why are
many people not surprised to find stories of the Mothman, phantom
inhabitants and mysterious creatures roaming this part of the country?
There have been a number of theories to explain the large number of
haunted happenings here, including that this area may be some sort of
“window” between dimensions. This would, according to the theories, allow
paranormal phenomenon to come and go and vanish at will, just as the
Mothman did after 13 months of appearing around Point Pleasant.

Those researchers with a historical bent have offered
their own solutions though. They have traced the supernatural roots of the
region back to a bloody event from the days of the American Revolution..
and a great curse.

As the American frontiersmen began to move west in the
1770’s, seven nations of Indians (the Shawnee, Delaware, Wyandot, Mingo,
Miami, Ottawa and Illinois) formed a powerful confederacy to keep the
white men from infringing on their territory. The Shawnee were the most
powerful of the tribes and were led by a feared and respected chieftain
called “Keigh-tugh-gua”, which translates to mean “Cornstalk”. In 1774,
when the white settlers were moving down into the Kanawha and Ohio River
valleys, the Indian Confederacy prepared to protect their lands by any
means necessary. The nations began to mass in a rough line across the
point from the Ohio River to the Kanawha River, numbering about 1200
warriors. They began to make preparations to attack the white settlers
near an area called Point Pleasant on the Virginia side of the Ohio River.
As word reached the colonial military leaders of the impending attack,
troops were sent in and faced off against the Indians. While the numbers
of fighters were fairly even on both sides, the Native Americans were no
match for the muskets of the white soldiers. The battle ended with about
140 colonials killed and more than twice that number of Indians. The
tribes retreated westward into the wilds of what is now Ohio and in order
to keep them from returning, a fort was constructed at the junction of the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers.

As time passed, the Shawnee leader, Cornstalk, made
peace with the white men. He would carry word to his new friends in 1777
when the British began coaxing the Indians into attacking the rebellious
colonies. Soon, the tribes again began massing along the Ohio River,
intent on attacking the fort. Cornstalk and Red Hawk, a Delaware chief,
had no taste for war with the Americans and they went to the fort on
November 7 to try and negotiate a peace before fighting began. Cornstalk
told Captain Arbuckle, who commanded the garrison, that he was opposed to
war with the colonists but that only he and his tribe were holding back
from joining on the side of the British. He was afraid that he would be
forced to go along by the rest of the Confederacy.

When he admitted to Arbuckle that he would allow his
men to fight if the other tribes did, Cornstalk, Red Hawk and another
Indian were taken as hostages. The Americans believed that they could use
him to keep the other tribes from attacking. They forced the Native
Americans into a standoff for none of them wanted to risk the life of
their leader. Cornstalk’s name not only stuck fear into hearts of the
white settlers up and down the frontier, but it also garnered respect from
the other Indian tribes. He was gifted with great oratory skills, fighting
ability and military genius. In fact, it was said that when his fighting
tactics were adopted by the Americans, they were able to defeat the
British in a number of battles where they had been both outnumbered and
outgunned.

Although taken as hostage, Cornstalk and the other
Indians were treated well and were given comfortable quarters, leading
many to wonder if the chief’s hostage status may have been voluntary in
the beginning. Cornstalk even assisted his captors in plotting maps of the
Ohio River Valley during his imprisonment. On November 9, Cornstalk’s son,
Ellinipisco, came to the fort to see his father and he was also detained.

The following day, gunfire was heard from outside the
walls of the fort, coming from the direction of the Kanawha River. When
men went out to investigate, they discovered that two soldiers who had
left the stockade to hunt deer had been ambushed by Indians. One of them
had escaped but the other man had been killed.

When his bloody corpse was returned to the fort, the
soldiers in the garrison were enraged. Acting against orders, they broke
into the quarters were Cornstalk and the other Indians were being held.
Even though the men had nothing to do with the crime, they decided to
execute the prisoners as revenge. As the soldiers burst through the
doorway, Cornstalk rose to meet them. It was said that he stood facing the
soldiers with such bravery that they paused momentarily in their attack.
It wasn’t enough though and the soldiers opened fire with their muskets.
Red Hawk tried to escape up through the chimney but was pulled back down
and slaughtered. Ellinipisico was shot where he had been sitting on a
stool and the other unknown Indian was strangled to death. As for
Cornstalk, he was shot eight times before he fell to the floor.

And as he lay their dying in the smoke-filled room, he
was said to have pronounced his now legendary curse. The stories say that
he looked upon his assassins and spoke to them: “I was the border man’s
friend. Many times I have saved him and his people from harm. I never
warred with you, but only to protect our wigwams and lands. I refused to
join your paleface enemies with the red coats. I came to the fort as your
friend and you murdered me. You have murdered by my side, my young son....
For this, may the curse of the Great Spirit rest upon this land. May it be
blighted by nature. May it even be blighted in its hopes. May the strength
of its peoples be paralyzed by the stain of our blood.”

He spoke these words, so says the legend, and then he
died. The bodies of the other Indians were then taken and dumped into the
Kanawha River but Cornstalk’s corpse was buried near the fort on Point
Pleasant, overlooking the junction of the Kanawha and Ohio Rivers. Here he
remained in many years, but he would not rest in peace.

In 1794, the town of Point Pleasant was established
near the site of the old fort. For many years after, the Indian’s grave
lay undisturbed but in 1840 his bones were removed to the grounds of the
Mason County Court House where, in 1899, a monument was erected in
Cornstalk’s memory. In the late 1950’s, a new court house was built in
Point Pleasant and the chief’s remains (which now consisted of three teeth
and about 15 pieces of bone) were placed in an aluminum box and reinterred
in a corner of the town’s Tu-Endie-Wei Park, next to the grave of a
Virginia frontiersman that Cornstalk once fought and later befriended. A
twelve foot monument was then erected in his honor.

And this is not the only monument dedicated to the
period in Point Pleasant. Another stands 86-feet tall and was dedicated in
August 1909, one month behind schedule. Originally, the dedication
ceremony had been set for July 22 but on the night before the event, the
clear overhead sky erupted with lightning and struck the upper part of a
crane that was supposed to put the monument into place. The machine was
badly damaged and it took nearly a month to repair it. The monument was
finally dedicated and stood for years, until July 4, 1921. On that day,
another bolt of lightning struck the monument, damaging the capstone and
some granite blocks. They were replaced and the monument still stands
today. But what is this bedeviled obelisk that seems to attract
inexplicable lightning on otherwise clear evenings? It is a monument to
the men who died in the 1774 Battle of Point Pleasant, when Cornstalk and
his allies were defeated.

Could the freak lightning strikes have been acts of
vengeance tied to Cornstalk’s fabled curse? Many believed so and for
years, residents of the triangular area made up of western West Virginia,
southwest Pennsylvania and southeastern Ohio spoke of strange happenings,
river tragedies and fires as part of the curse. Of course, many laughed
and said that the curse was nothing more than overactive imaginations,
ignoring the death toll and eerie coincidences that seemed to plague the
region for 200 years after the death of Chief Cornstalk.

Many tragedies and disasters were blamed on the curse:

1907: The worst coal mine disaster in American history
took place in Monongah, West Virginia on December 6, when 310 miners were
killed.

1944: In June of this year, 150 people were killed when
a tornado ripped through the tri-state triangular area.

1967: The devastating Silver Bridge disaster (detailed
in our section about the
Mothman) sent 46 people hurtling to their death in the Ohio River on
December 15. Many have also connected this tragedy to the eerie sightings
of the Mothman, strange lights in the sky and odd paranormal happenings.

1968: A Piedmont Airlines plane crashed in August near
the Kanawha Airport, killing 35 people on board.

1970: On November 14, a Southern Airways DC-10 crashed
into a mountain near Huntington, West Virginia, killing 75 people on
board.

1976: In March of that year, the town of Point Pleasant
was rocked in the middle of the night be an explosion at the Mason County
Jail. Housed in the jail was a woman named Harriet Sisk, who had been
arrested for the murder of her infant daughter. On March 2, her husband
came to the jail with a suitcase full of explosives to kill himself and
his wife and to destroy the building. Both of the Sisk’s were killed,
along with three law enforcement officers.

1978: In January, a freight train derailed at Point
Pleasant and dumped thousands of gallons of toxic chemicals. The chemicals
contaminated the town’s water supply and the wells had to be abandoned.

1978: In April of that same year, the town of St.
Mary’s (north of Point Pleasant) was struck with tragedy when 51 men who
were working on the Willow Island power plant were killed when their
construction scaffolding collapsed.

And there have been many other strange occurrences,
fires and floods. Most would say however that floods are a natural part of
living on the river, although Point Pleasant was almost obliterated in
1913 and 1937. It might be hard to tie such natural occurrences into a
curse, but what about the barge explosion that killed six men from town
just before Christmas 1953? Or the fire that destroyed an entire downtown
city block in the late 1880’s? Some have even gone as far as to blame the
curse for the death of Point Pleasant’s local economy, an event linked to
the passing of river travel and commerce.

So how real is the “curse”? Is it simply a string of
bloody and tragic coincidences, culled from two centuries of sadness in
the region? Can it be used to explain why the area seems to attract
strange happenings and eerie tales? Or is the area somehow “blighted”,
separate from any curse, and attractive to the strangeness that seems to
lurk in the shadowy corners of America?

The reader is asked to judge the validity of such
curses for himself. For the most part, the deaths and tragedies seem to
have waned over the years, perhaps dying out at the bicentennial of Chief
Cornstalk’s death. Largely, the curse has been forgotten over time and
today, Point Pleasant is better known for its connection to otherworldly
visitors like Mothman than for Indian curses and bloody frontier battles.

Fact or coincidence? Who can say... but I know that I
hope, for the sake of the people of the Ohio River valley, that Chief
Cornstalk will finally rest in peace!